*** New Unraid user - so maybe my questions & observations might not be technically correct. ***Bought a license - though I have not installed it yet as I am not sure if I will continue with this hardware (MB+CPU) combo. Still running the trial version for testing... Built an array with a bunch of old disks lying around. The thing that attracted me - you can throw any disk in as long as it's not bigger than your parity disk(s). Had a Supermicro X10SLM-F with 16GB ECC installed, gathering dust - scrounged in my junk and found an i3-4160 that would work in this MB. Had a spare Adaptec 71605. So maxed the gig out with 22 drives (6 SATA on MB + 16 SATA on the 71605), as follows - 2 x 8TB as parity, 8 x 8TB + 2 x 5TB + 4 x 4TB + 2 x 2TB + 2 x 1.5TB + 1 x 1TB - for a 21 device array with a 1TB SSD as a cache drive. What I like about this MB is that it has a USB3 port on the MB (not in the back as most MB's) that I can plug in the Unraid Boot USB. Also two 1GB ports for bonding. For chassis I used something I had never used before - a MININGEEK 24+4 HDD open frame from Amazon - put in 8 PF-12's Noctua fans and it's more silent than my other servers. Love this chassis and have decided all my future server builds will be using this. Might even migrate some of my existing storage servers to this. Observations 1) Most of my disks had xfs filesystem without a partition - so had to move the files to a spare disk - create a partition and move the files back - a temporary pain and lost about 2% space per drive. 2) Parity build took about 40 hours. 3) Played around with multiple scenarios - removed disks, replaced disks, etc. etc. 4) Lastly stopped the array - removed and destroyed (reformatted) both parity disks and brought up the array. Surprise - array came up as valid. Attached the parity disks and hit check parity button. Bunch of errors as expected - with a rebuild estimate in excess of a week! 5) Scrapped the old config - created a new config and brought up the array - parity started rebuilding with an expected time of 24 to 36 hours as expected (kept varying, but stabilized to 36 hours after about 12 hours). Surprises 1) Array coming up as valid without parity disks - no warnings on missing parity disks (when I brought the array up after destroying the parity disks) 2) Estimated parity rebuid time of over one week, once new parity disks installed. Questions 1) Accessing and copying files directly onto disks via cli (putty) bypasses parity? 2) Copying and moving files to user shares via cli keeps parity intact? - I think so, because files go to cache drive and then move to array.